83 P. 358 | Ariz. | 1905
The appellee, Francis M. Hartman, as trustee-in bankruptcy of the copartnership firm of Benbrook & Donovan, brought suit in the district court of Pima County to recover from the appellants, Adolph Bail and E. P. Drew, the possession of certain personal property, or the value thereof. The appellee in his complaint alleged that the property sought to be recovered was an asset of said copartnership firm of Benbrook & Donovan, and that the defendants,, within four months prior to an adjudication of bankruptcy against said firm, made in the district court of the first judicial district, had obtained a preference over other creditors of said firm of- the same class by bringing suit against said-firm, and by attáching said property under said writ of attachment. The appellants, by way of plea in abatement, set up that the plaintiff in the suit had no right or authority to •maintain the same as trustee in bankruptcy of said firm, for the reason that the district court was without jurisdiction to enter its judgment declaring the said firm of Benbrook & Donovan bankrupts, in that — 1. Because the petition in bankruptcy proceedings was insufficient in law'in the particular that it did not state the residence of the creditors nor of the signers of the petition, and in the further particular that
Upon the trial, the record in the bankruptcy proceedings in the district court against the firm of Benbrook & Donovan, over the objections made by appellants, was introduced in evidence. This record discloses that a petition signed by Fred Barman & Bro., Willard Bros., and Sideman, Lachman & Co., was filed in the district court of the first judicial district on the nineteenth day of September, 1902. The petition set forth that J. H. Benbrook and B. J. Donovan, for the six months next preceding the date of filing the petition, had been residents of Tucson, Arizona, and engaged in business therein as partners under the firm name and style of Ben-brook & Donovan, and that they, each of them, and the partnership owed debts in an amount exceeding one thousand dollars; that the petitioners were “creditors of said firm, having provable claims amounting in the aggregate, in excess of securities held by them, to the sum of $500.” The peti
The first assignment of error is based upon the ruling of the trial court admitting in evidence the record of the bankruptcy proceedings, and the overruling of appellants’ objections to the same upon the grounds: 1. That the petition was
Considering these objections in their order, the omission of the petition to state the nature of the petitioners’ claims and to give the amount of each is the only defect in the petition which presents any matter which calls for serious consideration. The Bankruptcy Act provides that petitioning creditors must have provable claims amounting in the aggregate to the sum of five hundred dollars before they may institute bankruptcy proceedings against a debtor. The rules prescribed by the supreme court of the United States contain no additional requirement than that prescribed in the act as to what the petition shall contain. The form, however, prescribed by the supreme court for a creditors’ petition requires, in addition to the general allegation, that the petitioners have provable claims to the amount of five hundred dollars against the defendant debtor, and a statement setting forth with particularity the nature and amount of each of such claims. A failure to state the nature and amount of the claims held by the petitioning creditors in such a petition would doubtless render it subject to direct attack. Such an omission, however, does not seem to us to render a judgment based upon such petition void for want of jurisdiction, and thus open to collateral attack. The supreme court of the United States in West Co. v. Lea, 174 U. S. 599, 19 Sup. Ct. 839, 43 L. Ed. 1098, m referring to the rules prescribed in the court’s general orders under the Bankruptcy Act, said: “These rules are but intended to execute the act, and not to add to its provisions by making that which the statute treats in some cases as immaterial a material fact in every case.” The material fact, under the Bankruptcy Act, which must be alleged and proven; is that the petitioning creditors have provable claims against the debtor in an amount aggregating five hundred dollars. A statement giving the nature and amount of each claim is but an amplification of this general fact. We hold, therefore, that the petition contained a sufficient showing of facts under the Bankruptcy Act, and the general orders of the supreme court to confer jurisdiction upon the district court to'enter judgment in the bankruptcy proceedings.
Even if we are not to assume, from the similarity of names,
The third ground of objection to the jurisdiction of the district court in the bankruptcy' proceedings would be well taken if the record disclosed that no service was had upon the bankrupt firm. A judgment of the bankruptcy court is open to collateral attack for want of jurisdiction over .the person of the alleged bankrupt where the record discloses that no service was had upon him, and no appearance was made in the proceedings by him, from which it may appear that he voluntarily submitted himself to the jurisdiction of the court. Chapman v. Brewer, 114 U. S. 168, 5 Sup. Ct. 799, 29 L. Ed. 83; New Lamp Chimney Co. v. Ansonia Brass Co., 91 U. S. 656, 23 L. Ed. 336. Mere irregularity of service or in the form of the notice given by a summons does not, however, render a judgment of a court of general jurisdiction void, so as to subject it to a collateral attack. Black on Judgments, sec. 263.
The subpoena issued in the bankruptcy proceedings was served on R. J. Donovan, a member of the firm of Benbrook & Donovan. It, in effect, notified him that a petition in bankruptcy had been filed by the petitioning creditors, and that it prayed for an adjudication of bankruptcy against the firm of Benbrook & Donovan. Whatever informality there may be in the form of the subpoena, it nevertheless contained sufficient to put the member of the firm served upon notice of the proceeding. The Bankruptcy Act, in section 5, subdivision “c” (Act July 1, 1898, e. 541, 30 Stats. 547 [U. S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 3424]), provides that “the court of bankruptcy which has jurisdiction of one of the partners may have jurisdiction of all the partners and of the administration of the partnership and individual property.” The record shows that the district court acquired jurisdiction over the person of Donován, and, under the foregoing provision of the Bankruptcy Act, it thereby acquired jurisdiction of the firm of Benbrook & Donovan and its property.
The third assignment is based upon the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of the court that the appellants, in obtaining a transfer of the property sued for from the firm of Benbrook & Donovan, intended thereby to obtain a preference over other creditors of said firm, and that said firm of Benbrook & Donovan intended thereby that such preference should be made. It was the special province of the trial court to determine all questions of fact. A reading of the record shows that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the finding, and we therefore cannot disturb the judg- • ment of the trial court upon that ground.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is therefore affirmed.